LASER Talks at Davis | Leonardo/ISASTwith Arizona State University

LASER Talks at Davis

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LASER (Leonardo Art Science Evening Rendezvous) is Leonardo/ISAST's international program of evening gatherings that brings artists and scientists together for informal presentations and conversations.

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LASER (Leonardo Art Science Evening Rendezvous) Talks is Leonardo's international program of evening gatherings that bring artists and scientists together for informal presentations and conversations. LASER Talks were founded in 2008 by Bay Area LASER Chair Piero Scaruffi and are in over 20 cities around the world. To learn more about how our LASER Hosts and to visit a LASER near you please visit our website

The mission of the LASERs is to provide the general public with a snapshot of the cultural environment of a region and to foster interdisciplinary networking.


Admission: free. Reservations recommended.

5:30pm Door.
6:00pm Speaker presentations.
6:45pm Conversations followed by Rapid Fire Community Sharing.

Refreshments will be provided. 

 

Ian Faloona, Associate Professor & Associate Bio-micrometeorologist, "The Universality of our Fluid Motions: An Experiment in Geophysical Dance"

Ian Faloona studied physical chemistry at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and conducted summer research in computational chemistry at Los Alamos National Lab. He then earned a Ph.D. in meteorology from Pennsylvania State University. After a postdoc in the Advanced Study Program at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, he joined the faculty at UC Davis. Over the past two years, he has been teaching a course that explores the relationship between human movement and the fluid motions on the rotating Earth. The ostensible goal of the course, aside from fostering novel modes of creativity, is to build a physical and visceral relationship between each individual and the greater Earth system, deepning comprehension of our relationship to the environment as manifested in the great fluid motions of sea and sky. He will discuss some of the preliminary findings of these experiments and search for improved questions to ask for future experiments. http://www.faloona.lawr.ucdavis.edu

 

Alison O'Daniel, Visual Artist & Filmmaker, "Quasi Closed-Captions: The Tuba Thieves"

Alison O’Daniel works across film, sculpture, performance, and music, inviting audiences and collaborators to navigate, de-construct, and re-imagine sound. She foregrounds the deaf and hard of hearing experience through process, collaboration, and material. In her current film, The Tuba Thieves, rather than having a composer respond to filmic imagery, the film is composed of narrative film, performance and sculptures based on commissioned musical scores made in response to an epidemic of tuba thefts occurring in Los Angeles high schools. She has presented solo exhibitions at Art In General, New York; and Samuel Freeman Gallery, Los Angeles, to name a few. Writing on O'Daniel's work has appeared in The New York Times, Artforum, Los Angeles Times, and ArtReview. O'Daniel received a BFA in Fibers and Material Studies from the Cleveland Institute of Art, a Post-graduate Diploma of Fine Art from Goldsmiths College, University of London, and a MFA in Studio Art from UC Irvine.  http://www.alisonodaniel.com

 

Chris Fraser, Artist, "The Tethered Image"

Chris Fraser is an artist who makes perceptual apparatuses and environments modeled on historic image making technologies. To Fraser, photographs are unbound by the time and place of their origin, able to meet anyone, anywhere, at any time. Though much is gained through this freedom, distance is placed between the objects of the world and the images we make of them. Through his work with apparatuses such as the camera obscura, he puts objects and their images back in dialog with each other, sacrificing broad distribution for an experience of image that is local and ephemeral. His talk will focus on the relationship between objects and images, and how images are regarded when they are physically tethered in space and time to their object, and the shifts that occur when the two drift apart. Fraser teaches photography at Mills College in Oakland, CA. 
His talk will be accompanied by a live demo in a dark theatre. http://www.chrisfraserstudio.com

 


Event sponsored by HArCS, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences UC Davis and Leonardo/ISAST.

When
May 24th, 2017 from  5:30 PM to  7:00 PM
Location
Online / Boston, MA
United States
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